- BAD BLOOD
-
- From my ancestors the Gauls I have pale blue eyes, a narrow brain,
and awkwardness in competition. I think my clothes are as barbaric as
- theirs. But I don't butter my hair.
-
- The Gauls were the most stupid hide-flayers and hay-burners of their
time.
-
- From them I inherit: idolatry, and love of sacrelige-- oh, all sorts
of vice; anger, lechery-- terrific stuff, lechery-- lying, above all, and
- laziness.
-
- I have a horror of all trades and crafts. Bosses and workers, all of
them peasants, and common. The hand that holds the pen is as good as
- the one that holds the plow. (What a century for hands!) I'll never
learn to use my hands. And then, domesticity goes too far. The propriety
- of beggary shames me. Criminals are as disgusting as men without balls;
I'm intact, and I don't care.
-
- But who has made my tongue so treacherous, that until now it has counseled
and kept me in idleness? I have not used even my body to get
- along. Out-idling the sleepy toad, I have lived everywhere. There's
not one family in Europe that I don't know. Families, I mean, like mine,
- who owe their existence to the Declaration of the Rights of Man. I
have known each family's eldest son!
-
- If only I had a link to some point in the history of France!
-
- But instead, nothing.
-
- I am well aware that I have always been of an inferior race. I cannot
understand revolt. My race has never risen, except to plunder; to
- devour like wolves a beast they did not kill.
-
- I remember the history of France, the Eldest Daughter of the Church.
I would have gone, a village serf, crusading to the Holy Land; my
- head is full of roads in the Swabian plains, of the sight of Byzantium,
of the ramparts of Jerusalem; the cult of Mary, the pitiful thought of
- Christ crucified, turns in my head with a thousand profane enchantments--
I sit like a leper among broken pots and nettles, at the foot of a
- wall eaten away by the sun. --And later, a wandering mercenary, I would
have bivouacked under German nighttimes.
-
- Ah! one thing more: I dance the Sabbath in a scarlet clearing, with
old women and children.
-
- I don't remember much beyond this land, and Christianity. I will see
myself forever in its past. But always alone, without a family; what
- language, in fact, did I used to speak? I never see myself in the councils
of Christ; nor in the councils of the Lords, Christ's representatives.
- What was I in the century past? I only find myself today. The vagabonds,
the hazy wars are gone. The inferior race has swept over all-- the
- People (as they put it), Reason; Nation and Science.
-
- Ah, Science! Everything is taken from the past. For the body and the
soul-- the last sacrament-- we have Medicine and Philosophy,
- household remedies and folk songs rearrainged. And royal entertainments,
and games that kings forbid. Geography, Cosmography,
- Mechanics, Chemistry!...
-
- Science, the new nobility! Progress! The world moves!... And why shouldn't
it?
-
- We have visions of numbers. We are moving toward the Spirit. What I
say is oracular and absolutely right. I understand... and since I
- cannot express myself except in pagan terms, I would rather keep quiet.
-
- Pagan blood returns! The Spirit is at hand... why does Christ not help
me, and grant my soul nobility and freedom? Ah, but the Gospel
- belongs to the past! The Gospel. The Gospel...
-
- I wait gluttinously for God. I have been of an inferior race for ever
and ever.
-
- And now I am on the beaches of Brittany.... Let cities light their
lamps in the evening; my daytime is done, I am leaving Europe. The air
of
- the sea will burn my lungs; lost climates will turn my skin to leather.
To swim, to pulverize grass, to hunt, above all to smoke; to drink
- strong drinks, as strong as molten ore, as did those dear ancestors
around their fires.
-
- I will come back with limbs of iron, with dark skin, and angry eyes;
in this mask, they will think I belong to a strong race. I will have gold;
- I will be brutal and indolent. Women nurse these ferocious invalids
come back from the tropics. I will become involved in politics. Saved.
-
- Now I am accursed, I detest my native land. The best thing is a drunken
sleep, stretched out on some strip of shore.
-
- But no one leaves. Let us set out once more on our native roads, burdened
with my vice-- that vice that since the age of reason has driven
- roots of suffering into my side-- that towers to heaven, beats me,
hurls me down, drags me on.
-
- Ultimate innocence, final timidity. All's said. Carry no more my loathing
and treacheries before the world.
-
- Come on! Marching, burdens, the desert, boredom and anger.
-
- Hire myself to whom? What beasts adore? What sacred images destroy?
What hearts shall I break? What lie maintain? Through what blood
- wade?
-
- Better to keep away from justice. A hard life, outright stupor-- with
a dried-out fist to lift the coffin lid, lie down, and suffocate. No old
age
- this way-- no danger: terror is very un-French.
-
- --Ah! I am so forsaken I will offer at any shrine impulses toward perfection.
-
- Oh, my self-denial, my marvelous Charity, my Selfless love! And still
here below!
-
- De profundis, Dominie... what an ass I am!
-
- When I was still a little child, I admired the hardened convict on
whom the prison door will always close; I used to visit the bars and the
- rented rooms his presence had consecrated; I saw with his eyes the
blue sky and the flower-filled work of the fields; I followed his fatal
- scent through city streets. He had more strength than the saints, more
sense than any explorer-- and he, he alone! was witness to his glory
- and his rightness.
-
- Along the open road on winter nights, homeless, cold, and hungry, one
voice gripped my frozen heart: "Weakness or strength: you exist,
- that is strength.... You don't know where you are going or why you
are going; go in everywhere, answer everyone. No one will kill you,
- any more than if you were a corpse." In the morning my eyes were
so vacant and my face so dead that the people I met may not even have
- seen me.
-
- In cities, mud went suddenly red and black, like a mirror when a lamp
in the next room moves, like treasure in the forest! Good luck, I
- cried, and I saw a sea of flames and smoke rise to heaven, and left
and right all wealth exploded like a billion thunderbolts.
-
- But orgies and the companionship of women were impossible for me. Not
even a friend. I saw myself before an angry mob, facing a firing
- squad, weeping out sorrows they could not understand, and pardoning--
like Joan of Arc!-- "Priests, professors and doctors, you are
- mistaken in delivering me into the hands of the law. I have never been
one of you; I have never been a Christian; I belong to the race that
- sang on the scaffold; I do not understand your laws; I have no moral
sense; I am a brute; you are making a mistake...."
-
- Yes, my eyes are closed to your light. I am an animal, a nigger. But
I can be saved. You are fake niggers; maniacs, savages, misers, all of
- you. Businessman, you're a nigger; judge, you're a nigger; general,
you're a nigger; emperor, old scratch-head, you're a nigger: you've
- drunk a liquor no one taxes, from Satan's still. This nation is inspired
by fever and cancer. Invalids and old men are so respectable that they
- ask to be boiled. The best thing is to quit this continent where madness
prowls, out to supply hostages for these wretches. I will enter the
- true kingdom of the sons of Ham.
-
- Do I understand nature? Do I understand myself? No more words! I shroud
dead men in my stomach.... Shouts, drums, dance, dance,
- dance! I can't even imagine the hour when the white men land, and I
will fall into nothingness.
-
- Thirst and hunger, shouts, dance, dance, dance!
-
- The white men are landing! Cannons! Now we must be baptized, get dressed,
and go to work.
-
- My heart has been stabbed by grace. Ah! I hadn't thought this would
happen.
-
- But I haven't done anything wrong. My days will be easy, and I will
be spared repentance. I will not have had the torments of the soul
- half-dead to the Good, where austure light rises again like funeral
candles. The fate of a first-born son, a premature coffin covered with
- shining tears. No doubt, perversion is stupid, vice is stupid; rottenness
must always be cast away. But the clock must learn to strike more
- than hours of pure pain! Am I to be carried away like a child, to play
in paradise, forgetting all this misery?
-
- Quick! Are there any other lives? Sleep for the rich is impossible.
Wealth has always lived openly. Divine love alone confers the keys of
- knowledge. I see that nature is only a show of kindness. Farewell chimeras,
ideals and errors.
-
- The reasonable song of angels rises from the rescue ship: it is divine
love. Two loves! I may die of earthly love, die of devotion. I have left
- behind creatures whose grief will grow at my going. You choose me from
among the castaways; aren't those who remain my friends?
-
- Save them!
-
- I am reborn in reason. The world is good. I will bless life. I will
love my brothers. There are no longer childhood promises. Nor the hope
- of escaping old age and death. God is my strength, and I praise God.
-
- Boredom is no longer my love. Rage, perversion, madness, whose every
impulse and disaster I know-- my burden is set down entire. Let
- us appraise with clear heads the extent of my innocence. I am no longer
able to ask for the consolation of a beating. I don't imagine I'm off
- on a honeymoon with Jesus Christ as my father-in-law.
-
- I am no prisoner of my own reason. I have said: God. I want freedom,
within salvation: how shall I go about it? A taste for frivolity has left
- me. No further need for divine love or for devotion to duty. I do not
regret the age of emotion and feeling. To each his own reason,
- contempt, Charity: I keep my place at the top of the angelic ladder
of good sense.
-
- As for settled happiness, domestic or not... no, I can't. I am too
dissipated, too weak. Work makes life blossom, an old idea, not mine; my
- life doesn't weigh enough, it drifts off and floats far beyond action,
that third pole of the world.
-
- What an old maid I'm turning into, to lack the courage to love death!
-
- If only God would grant me that celestial calm, etherial calm, and
prayer-- like the saints of old. --The Saints! They were strong!
- Anchorites, artists of a kind we no longer need....
-
- Does this farce have no end? My innocence is enough to make me cry.
Life is the farce we all must play.
-
- Stop it! This is your punishment.... Forward march!
-
- Ah! my lungs burn, my temples roar! Night rolls in my eyes, beneath
this sun! My heart... my arms and legs....
-
- Where are we going? To battle? I am weak! the others go on ahead...
tools, weapons... give me time!
-
- Fire! Fire at me! Here! or I'll give myself up! --Cowards! --I'll kill
myself! I'll throw myself beneath the horses' hooves!
-
- Ah!...
-
- --I'll get used to it.
-
- That would be the French way, the path of honor!